Scientific Reports (Jan 2021)

Mononucleotide repeat expansions with non-natural polymerase substrates

  • Alexander V. Chudinov,
  • Vadim A. Vasiliskov,
  • Viktoriya E. Kuznetsova,
  • Sergey A. Lapa,
  • Natalia A. Kolganova,
  • Edward N. Timofeev

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-82150-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Replicative strand slippage is a biological phenomenon, ubiquitous among different organisms. However, slippage events are also relevant to non-natural replication models utilizing synthetic polymerase substrates. Strand slippage may notably affect the outcome of the primer extension reaction with repetitive templates in the presence of non-natural nucleoside triphosphates. In the current paper, we studied the ability of Taq, Vent (exo-), and Deep Vent (exo-) polymerases to produce truncated, full size, or expanded modified strands utilizing non-natural 2′-deoxyuridine nucleotide analogues and different variants of the homopolymer template. Our data suggest that the slippage of the primer strand is dependent on the duplex fluttering, incorporation efficiency for a particular polymerase-dNTP pair, rate of non-templated base addition, and presence of competing nucleotides.